I will reply to elementaldearwatson first.
"Absence of evidence is not the evidence of absence." I think that pretty much sums up your logical flaw in your final argument.
Well, firstly, it was your argument., not mine. I just applied the same argument that you applied to abiogenesis to God.
Secondly, absence of evidence
is evidence of absence, if you would expect to find evidence of existence. To use a very basic example, if I were testing the hypothesis "this box contains chocolates", then opening the box and finding an absence of chocolates would be evidence that the hypothesis were false.
If you're positing the idea of a God who has influence over the world, then you would expect there to be evidence of that influence. If God has no influence over the world, then that's functionally no different than God not existing.
Can you give me an idea where life came from other than random chance or the supernatural?
From the laws of physics and chemistry.
"0 scientists claim that".
Please read. I'm guessing you did 0 research to prove that 0 scientists claim that. Apparently it is a popular claim, as the #1 google result features this is as a hypothesis.
http://www.livescience.com/1804-greatest-mysteries-life-arise-earth.html
That says the opposite of what your claim was. Your claim was that science postulates that "A cell [...] simply jump
into existence". In support of that you post a link to an article which talks about cells gradually being built up from small molecules and chemicals gradually becoming larger and more complex ones. That's the literal opposite of simply jumping into existence.
Life comes from life.
Part of the problem with a statement like this is that it assumes that "life" is a simple category with hard, delineated edges. It's not. Something like a virus, for example, doesn't really fit into the category of alive or the category of not-alive.
Tell me, is a chemical which replicates itself alive?
Chicken or the egg? Answer = you cannot have a chicken without an egg or an egg without a chicken (it's not a perfect example).
The answer to which came first is the egg. Dinosaurs were around a long time before chickens, and chickens evolved from dinosaurs. In fact, under modern cladistics, chickens
are dinosaurs.
And even then you're making the same mistake as above, in assuming that there's a hard, delineated line between "chicken" and "not-chicken". But evolution doesn't work like that. Evolution happens gradually. If you could track backwards in time you'd be able to point at an ancestor of the chicken and say "that is not a chicken", but there would never be a point at which you could point at an individual and say "this is the first ever chicken". It's fuzzy.
Let me give you an example to illustrate what I mean. Let's say that there's a line-up of people. They range in height from 4' to 7', with the shortest at one end and the tallest at the other. Each person is exactly 1mm taller than the person to their left. Now, you could point to someone at one end and say "s/he is tall" or "s/he is short". And you could point to someone in the middle and you could say "s/he is neither tall nor short". What you couldn't do is go to a couple of people standing next to each other and say that one of them was tall/short and the other was not. What you'd have is a fuzzy area somewhere where the people are starting to get tall/short.
Same with the chicken. You'll have creatures you can look at and say "they are chickens", and you'll have creatures who are their ancestors you can look at and say "they are not chickens", but there'll be a huge fuzzy area in between.
So, the answer to the question "which came first, the chicken or the egg?" is the egg. And the word "chicken" isn't as useful as you think it is when asking the question.
You need a jumpstart to life that cannot be explained by science.
You need a "jumpstart" to life that cannot
fully be explained by science
yet.
You're offering up a God of the Gaps. The problem with the God of the Gaps is that the more those gaps are filled in by scientific discovery, the smaller and less significant that God gets.
I have done 0 research to find a name for this, but if you would like to, I will not stop you.
It's your assertion, the burden of proof is yours. I'm confident that what you are claiming is not a scientific theory at all, so I have no need to look.
"Humans not having directly observed something doesn't mean that that thing didn't happen."
That's a fabulous statement. Now just replace the words "something" with God and replace "that thing didn't happen" with 'that He doesn't exist'.
So you're going to ignore how that actually related to what you were saying? I'm glad you agree with the statement, though, because that statement completely demolishes the argument you made.
What type of evidence would you like?
Empirical.
The fact that life exists?
The fact that life exists is evidence life exists. No more and no less.
Supernatural (impossible to be explained by modern science) events recorded?
There is no empirical evidence of this.
A 66-Book document describing exactly Who He is and that He Is?
I have 53 years worth of television episodes, films, books, comics and audio plays describing exactly who Doctor Who is. That is not evidence that he actually exists.
Perhaps prophecies being fulfilled time after time?
Assuming you're talking about Biblical prophecy, this is mostly untrue, and wholly misleading, and ignores the prophecies which were and remain unfulfilled. Perhaps you could be more specific?
The dead coming back to life?
There is no empirical evidence for this.
Take your pick: all these things happened.
This is an assertion, not evidence.
The Book of Mark is a great starting place.
"The Eleventh Hour" is a great starting place.